The teenager on television. The number of shows that have attempted to show us what life is like for a teenager is very large, possibly as large as the number of {{Police Procedural}}s. The quality of these shows varies from the sublime (''Series/MySoCalledLife'') to the just plain silly (''Series/SavedByTheBell'').

Many of these shows share some tropes that audiences [[{{MST 3 K Mantra}} have agreed to accept, to get on with the storytelling]]. Some examples...

* ''[[DawsonCasting Twenty-four-year-old actors playing teens]]''.* ''Perfect complexions.'' Skin conditions are much better in the TV world than they are in the real world. This one grates a bit, when the character is supposed to be suffering a crisis of confidence related to a pimple that the audience cannot quite make out.* ''[[GoshDangItToHeck An inability to swear]]'', [[MediaWatchdog even mildly]].** In movies at least, this tends to be taken to the other extreme. For example, in ''Superbad'', just about every other word Jonah Hill's character says is [[ClusterFBomb "fuck"]]. While real teenagers do swear, few do it to even a fifth of that extent.* A similar ''[[TotallyRadical inability to talk like actual teenagers]], [[TwoDecadesBehind at least ones from this decade]].''* Depending on the target audience of the show, they may ''never engage in sex'', no matter how old they are or how many opportunities present themselves. They may devote a disproportionate amount of time, energy, and brain power to getting/attracting the opposite sex (almost never the same sex), but won't go beyond kissing, and sometimes not even that far.** If this is not the case, they often will instead [[EverybodyHasLotsOfSex ALL]] [[HormoneAddledTeenager engage in sex whenever given the opportunity]], and the girls will dress as provocatively as possible, [[NoDressCode including in school]]. This sex will likely lead to a pregnancy for at least one character on the show, or at least a pregnancy scare.* Though it's not as universal, the concept of teens being [[TeensAreMonsters emotional and impulsive]] sometimes undergoes {{Flanderization}}, resulting in a character whose existence revolves around [[DamselScrappy taking the most suicidally dumb course of actions in any given situation]]. This trait is seen less in TeenDrama than in shows with mostly adults and only one teen.* At the same time, Teens are also capable of putting together incredibly elaborate plots. Especially if it's a {{Revenge}} scheme.* [[TeensAreShort Average teens in TV land are frequently shorter than adults]]. Not so in RealLife. * A PosterGalleryBedroom.* Rebellious, with [[TotallyRadical black ripped T-shirts (with skulls on them)]] and jeans with holes in the knees, dyed hair, braces, and a love for [[ThePowerOfRock rock music]].* [[AdultsAreUseless Borderline non-existent]] or [[OverprotectiveDad ridiculously clueless and cynical]] parents. The relationship between them is almost always bad[[note]]which, contrary to popular belief, is generally not TruthInTelevision according to most psychologists and sociologists[[/note]].* A complete awareness of and engagement with ''all'' things "trendy/popular." This is particularly common in shows attempting AnAesop.* Generally, in television, you can expect Teens to have ridiculously active social lives. There will be little or no in-fighting or disdain within their friendship circles, and nearly every parental dispute will be about how the Teen's social life is adversely affecting his/her schoolwork, relationship with them, etc. Punishment will inevitably be a grounding from any kind of social activity for an X amount of time. As any RealLife parent who's raised a teen will tell you, however, most disputes (even among the most popular/sociable teens) have little or nothing to do with the teen's social life. Unless, of course, he/she is involved with a gang or cult.

See also: HollywoodHomely, CousinOliver, SoapOperaRapidAgingSyndrome.

Note: TeenDrama has entries about the ''show'' genre. This entry is meant to capture tropes about the ''characters.''

----!!Examples:

[[AC:{{Film}}]]* Lightly averted by ''Film/BackToTheFuture''. Biff gets drunk and tries to molest Lorraine, but he's the JerkJock. On the other hand, Lorraine is a sympathetic character who both drinks and smokes as a teen, shocking Marty, who naturally thought his mother would be as straitlaced as she was as an adult. And no one shies away from swearing. Of course, the actors were still all in their twenties, which starts to become quite obvious by the [[Film/BackToTheFuturePartIII third movie]].

[[AC:{{Literature}}]]* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' partially follows this. In the latter books, the teen characters go through lots of romantic drama and "snog" (i.e. passionately kiss or, in American slang, "make out") a number of times, but it's simply never mentioned whether any of them go all the way. Cue fan debates over whether or not Harry lost his virginity to Ginny [[GettingCrapPastTheRadar "off-screen"]] ("off-page?") during ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince Half-Blood Prince]]''. They do swear, but the worst words are taken out with the NarrativeProfanityFilter unless they happen to be FantasticSlurs. The actors in [[Film/HarryPotter the movies]] are pretty close to the right age, but they all have good skin. And according to Website/IMDb trivia, the actors' skin was actually digitally cleaned up on the fourth film.** There's still a scene in the fourth film where Dan Radcliffe's acne is fairly visible, during the Second Task.** Jo had no problem having them swear, but has stated that "my editor wouldn't let me." Well, until Deathly Hallows, that is.* Averted in the ''Literature/{{Tunnels}}'' series, complete with both Will and Chester swearing occasionally. Regardless, there is a possibility for the film series to have DawsonCasting.* All books which are in the category of "juvenile literature" in the United States until the 1970s, with a few (very controversial) exceptions such as ''Literature/TheCatcherInTheRye''.** Creator/JudyBlume's novels for teenagers in the 1970s were among the first to tackle such controversial matters as racism (''Literature/IggiesHouse''), menstruation (''Literature/AreYouThereGodItsMeMargaret''), divorce (''It's Not the End of the World'', ''Literature/JustAsLongAsWereTogether''), bullying (''Literature/{{Blubber}}''), masturbation (''Deenie''; ''Literature/ThenAgainMaybeIWont'') and teen sex (''Forever''), and as such have been the source of controversy over the appropriateness of such topics for her middle school audience. They have been banned often.** Creator/RobertAHeinlein's early science fiction novels contained many teens who seemed rather clueless about sex. This was due to the fact that the publishers marked them as "juvenile" literature (which they pretty much were) and would not accept anything about sex in them. Heinlein was a vocal proponent of the notion that juvenile readers were far more sophisticated and able to handle complex or difficult themes than most people realized. Heinlein was always aware of the editorial limitations put in place by the editors of his novels and stories, and finally broke into adult novels where he could do as he mostly pleased.* Averted in the ''Literature/CHERUBSeries'', where the teens swear profusely, have fairly normal reactions to sex (and no resultant pregnancy, although James' hormones do lead him to be kidnapped at one point), and on occasion, are only stopped from taking drugs by the threat of being thrown out of CHERUB and sent back to state care homes.* ''Literature/RallyRoundTheFlagBoys'' goes so far as to mention that the teenage characters never actually engage in any sexual activity further than petting, though the boys lie to each other about going all the way.* Averted in ''Literature/TempestANovel''. The main cast of the series are almost all in their late teens and early twenties, and behave accordingly. While they do swear, drink, throw wild parties, and even have sex, they never do so to an excessive amount, and the fact that they do so is never brought up and treated as normal. Despite all this, for the most part all seem rather mature for their age.

[[AC:LiveActionTV]]* 1970's bittersweet BBC sitcom ''Series/{{Butterflies}}'' focused on the usual sort of well-off middle class family living in a nice part of London. Put-upon housewife Wendy Craig is taken for granted by her husband and two teenage sons - who in the 1970's talked, at best, in teenage slang that was only ten years out of date. Even in the late 1970's when most kids were getting into punk rock, the two sons stood out horribly as Teenagers That Time Forgot, talking hippie argot that would have been horribly stale and dated in 1967. * The British TV show ''Series/{{Skins}}'' is a conscious decision to avert most of these (except the skin tone one). The characters do swear, have sex, do drugs, etc.* 2009 Series ''Series/{{Misfits}}'' follows in the footsteps of ''Series/{{Skins}}'', and despite being a sci-fi drama concerning young offenders with superpowers, ''somehow'' manages to portray aspects of teen life even more realistically than its predecessor. The characters indulge in all the usual crimes of hedonistic youth, and suffer all the non-glamorous consequences. Also, amazingly, they ''don't'' all look like models!* Mostly averted on ''Series/FreaksAndGeeks'', barring some occasional DawsonCasting and slightly less swearing than normal.* Series/{{Castle}}'s daughter Alexis is a refreshing aversion, as what we see of her experiences imitate reality very well (right down to the teen party where her friend passes out from alcohol poisoning), without any excess drama. It helps that she's probably [[WiseBeyondTheirYears more responsible than her father and grandmother combined.]]* On ''Series/MadMen'' Sally Draper is turning into a remarkably nuanced aversion, particularly for the only major adolescent character in a large ensemble cast.* Pick ANY [[{{DCLAU}} live action Disney Channel sitcom]], chances are that just one of 'em will feature at least 50%-75% of the rules of being a TV Teen. Averted sometimes with the recent {{Nickelodeon}} sitcoms, they at least [[GettingCrapPastTheRadar try to take risks]].* While ''Series/BoyMeetsWorld'' followed about half of the rules of the family-friendly model of a TVTeen, it came up with a few creative ways to {{Lampshade}} and justify them in-universe. Most of the plots revolving around teens' emotional impulsiveness/stupid decisions went to the character of Shawn, who was noted in the show to have delinquent tendencies and an impressively terrible home life with tangible effects, and the other characters were mostly exempt from these issues. Also, while Cory and Topanga didn't have sex until they got married, their relationship was also remarked upon by the characters themselves as being ''highly'' atypical (they first started crushing on each other around the age of six, and dated steadily since age 13).* ''Series/IDidntDoIt'' tries to [[JustifiedTrope justify]] this by framing each episode as the main characters telling an authority figure what happened. It seems to be becoming a DeconstructiveParody of the sort of KidCom it's surrounded by on Creator/DisneyChannel.* Apart from the DawsonCasting, ''Series/TheInbetweeners'' generally averts this. The characters [[SirSwearsALot swear]] [[ClusterFBomb constantly]], don't have sex ([[ThrowTheDogABone at least until the movies]]) and generally act much like real teens.

[[AC:WebOriginal]]* [[WebVideo/TheAsylumPictures The Asylum]] is an inverted version of this, with them, nevertheless being dark and brooding, being sophisticated, yet spout foul language and dark comedy.